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> As the ww2 generation passes on,

I was at a picnic recently that happened to be on VE day, it really struck me that now London is only about 35% or so English as the ww2 generation would've known it, almost no one has a particularly good reason to bother paying attention. I'm sure I was the only person there who knows who Barnes Wallis was.

And yes I miss the boffins. They do still sort of exist but that type of mind has been strangled by the last few decades drive towards left-brained processes where everything basically has to be nailed down before the work actually starts.

That latter point is one reason why we're struggling so much - we owe a great debt to the generations who built all the infrastructure and housing. We didn't pay it off, we now can't really do anything at scale other than extract rent. The victorians were building a HS2 every few years.




Not sure the WW2 generation would be all too comfortable with you looking around and making a snap judgement based solely on appearances that some of the people around you have a lesser right to call themselves ‘English’ than you because you assume none of them know who Barnes Wallace is.


I'm not assuming, I asked; they wouldn't call themselves english anyway. Almost no one does anymore anyway, I don't.


> London is only about 35% or so English

It also generates a quarter of the UK's GDP, so there's that.


How else do you think we pay for (say) about half of all social housing in central London to go to those born overseas

Or even just the bizarre notion of having best part of half of zone 1 be social in the first place.


If there's so much social housing in London and so many people born overseas living in London, they can hardly help living in the social housing. Not sure that's a good or bad thing.




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